Social Inequality in a Global Age, Fifth Edition. CHAPTER 2 The Great Debate

Similar documents
SOCI 224 Social Structure of Modern Ghana

Stratification: Rich and Famous or Rags and Famine? 2015 SAGE Publications, Inc.

An imbalance between rich and poor is the oldest and most fatal ailment of all republics. Plutarch, Greek philosopher (c A.D.

Social Stratification Presentation Script

Subverting the Orthodoxy

Why study Social Stratification?

Chapter 1 Understanding Sociology. Introduction to Sociology Spring 2010

Perspective: Theory: Paradigm: Three major sociological perspectives. Functionalism

Karl Marx ( )

Reminders. Please keep phones away. Make sure you are in your seat when the bell rings. Be respectful and listen when others are talking.

Chapter 1 The Sociological Perspective. Putting Social Life Into Perspective. The sociological imagination is: Definition of Sociology:

Industrial Rev Practice

Name: Global 10 Section. Global Regents Pack #10. Turning Points

Chapter Seven: Global Stratification

Laissez-Faire vs. Socialism Who is responsible?

Sociology is the study of societies and the way that they shape people s behaviour, beliefs,

Political Theory. Political theorist Hannah Arendt, born in Germany in 1906, fled to France in 1933 when the Nazis came to power.

Action Theory. Collective Conscience. Critical Theory. Determinism. Description

Max Weber. SOCL/ANTH 302: Social Theory. Monday, March 26, by Ronald Keith Bolender

POL 343 Democratic Theory and Globalization February 11, "The history of democratic theory II" Introduction

Content Reviewer Dr. Vishal Jadhav Tilak Maharashtra Vidyapteeth Pune Language Editor Dr. Vishal Jadhav Tilak Maharashtra Vidyapteeth Pune

[ITEM NO.:07] Important Questions for the final Examination For B.A. First Year (Honours) (Part - I) Students:

Understanding Social Equity 1 (Caste, Class and Gender Axis) Lakshmi Lingam

Chapter 1: Foundations of Government Unit 1

UNIT 28 CLASS CONFLICT

Chapter 1 What is Sociology? Introduction to Sociology, 10e (Hewitt/White/Teevan)

Class on Class. Lecturer: Gáspár Miklós TAMÁS. 2 credits, 4 ECTS credits Winter semester 2013 MA level

ANALYSIS OF SOCIOLOGY MAINS Question Papers ( PAPER I ) - TEAM VISION IAS

WIKIPEDIA IS NOT A GOOD ENOUGH SOURCE FOR AN ACADEMIC ASSIGNMENT

Origins of Sociology

UNIT 26 INDUSTRIAL CLASSES

this social science discipline looks at the development and structure of human society and how it works (Bain, Colyer, DesRiveires, & Dolan,2002)

Chapter 1 Sociological Theory Chapter Summary

Is Democracy is the Best Form of Government System?

THE SCIENTIFIC DEFINITION OF SOCIAL STRATIFICATION, AS A HISTORICAL PROCESS OBJECTIVE

The difference between Communism and Socialism

Absolutism. Absolutism, political system in which there is no legal, customary, or moral limit on the government s

Principles of Sociology

explain the integrative and disintegrative aspects of social conflicts;

Communism. Marx and Engels. The Communism Manifesto

Conflict Theory Functionalism Symbolic Interactionalism Macro-orientated

25.4 Reforming the Industrial World. The Industrial Revolution leads to economic, social, and political reforms.

HOLT CHAPTER 22. Section 1: Capitalism Section 2: Socialism Section 3: Communism HOLT, RINEHART AND WINSTON

Chapter 12: Absolutism and Revolution Regulate businesses/spy on citizens' actions

Introduction to Ideology

THE SOCIAL CONTRACT THEORY OF THE ORIGIN OF THE STATE

Soci250 Sociological Theory

High School. Prentice Hall. Sociology, 12th Edition (Macionis) Indiana Academic Standards - Social Studies Sociology.

Judeo-Christian and Greco-Roman Perspectives

US Government Chapter 1 Section 3 Review

NR 5 NM I FILOSOFI 2012/13 RICHARD GOGSTAD, SANDEFJORD 2

Adam Smith, The Wealth of Nations, 1776 The Flow of Money and Goods in a Market Economy

Section 4 Notes Window panes

UNIVERSITY OF MALTA THE MATRICULATION CERTIFICATE EXAMINATION INTERMEDIATE LEVEL SOCIOLOGY. May 2010 EXAMINERS REPORT

Bellringer: Who do you think gives people who run the government the authority or power to rule us?

Political Science 103 Spring, 2018 Dr. Edward S. Cohen INTRODUCTION TO POLITICAL PHILOSOPHY

Module-8 SOCIAL STRATIFICATION

KRISHNAKANTAHANDIQUISTATEOPENUNIVERSITY M.A. PROGRAMME SOCIOLOGY

Warm Up Review: Mr. Cegielski s Presentation of Origins of American Government

Political Science 103 Fall, 2015 Dr. Edward S. Cohen INTRODUCTION TO POLITICAL PHILOSOPHY

Socialization and emerging Social Structure

TECHNOLOGY, NEEDS AND POWER AS MEANS OF DISTRIBUTION AND JUSTICE

Sociology 101: The Social Lens

Do you think you are a Democrat, Republican or Independent? Conservative, Moderate, or Liberal? Why do you think this?

Soc 1 Lecture 6. Tuesday, February 17, 2009 Winter 09

Definition-the State is the institutional arrangement of civil laws and regulations.

Chapters 2 and 3 Do Video Games / The Media Cause Violence? Social Conflict Theory: Does Socioeconomic Status Cause Crime?

Malthe Tue Pedersen History of Ideas

MARXISM AND INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS ELİF UZGÖREN AYSELİN YILDIZ

UNIT 2 EDUCATION, SOCIAL STRUCTURE, SOCIAL STRATIFICATION AND SOCIAL MOBILITY

Chapter 1: What is sociology?

* Economies and Values

Marx (cont.), Market Socialism

SOCIAL STRATIFICATION. Jennifer L. Fackler, M.A.

If a noble man puts out the eye of another noble man, his eye shall be put out. If he breaks another noble man s bone, his bone shall be broken.

Understanding the Enlightenment Reading & Questions

Test Bank For Sociology in Our Times 9th Edition by Diana Kendall CHAPTER 1: THE SOCIOLOGICAL PERSPECTIVE

Test Bank For Sociology in Our Times 9th Edition by Diana Kendall CHAPTER 1: THE SOCIOLOGICAL PERSPECTIVE

I. What is a Theoretical Perspective? The Functionalist Perspective

COURSE OUTLINES AND TEACHING AIDS BY JOHN GUEGUEN,

Mastering the TEKS in World History Ch. 13

Comte. Durkheim. Parsons (1938) Parsons (1951)

The division of society into distinct social classes is one of the most striking manifestations of the modern world... It has often been the source

The Marxist Critique of Liberalism

Essential Question: How did both the government and workers themselves try to improve workers lives?

ECONOMICS CHAPTER 11 AND POLITICS. Chapter 11

Karl Marx by Dr. Frank Elwell

Radical Equality as the Purpose of Political Economy. The ruling ideas of each age have ever been the ideas of its ruling class.

School of Law, Governance & Citizenship. Ambedkar University Delhi. Course Outline

Assembly Line For the first time, Henry Ford s entire Highland Park, Michigan automobile factory is run on a continuously moving assembly line when

Name Chapter 8--Stratification: United States and Global Perspectives Description Instructions

2. In what present day country AND river valley was Mesopotamia located? 4. What made Judaism a unique religion in the ancient world?

Theories of the Historical Development of American Schooling

Chapter 1: Principles of Government Section 1

Test Bank For Sociology in Our Times 9th Edition by Diana Kendall CHAPTER 1: THE SOCIOLOGICAL PERSPECTIVE

The Enlightenment & Democratic Revolutions. Enlightenment Ideas help bring about the American & French Revolutions

STRATIFICATION AND MOBILITY

QUEEN'S UNIVERSITY Department of Political Studies POLS 350 History of Political Thought 1990/91 Fall/Winter

World History Test Review. Western Civilizations to the American Revolution

Karl Marx. Louis Blanc

Transcription:

Social Inequality in a Global Age, Fifth Edition CHAPTER 2 The Great Debate TEST ITEMS Part I. Multiple-Choice Questions 1. According to Lenski, early radical social reformers included a. the Hebrew prophets * b. the Egyptian pharaohs c. the Roman Senate d. the Hindu priests 2. Confucius believed that the people should a. respect rightful authority * b. question authority c. follow the Tao rather than the emperor d. refuse to serve in the military 3. Lenski places Plato as a radical, for in Plato's ideal republic the rulers are superior to the masses only in a. income b. wealth c. power * d. property 4. Radical Christian reformers argued that a. God favors and honors the poor * b. kings rule by divine right c. God gave all power to the Pope d. riches are a sign of God s favor 5. Marx contends that under capitalism, a society's class structure becomes: a. more egalitarian with more opportunity b. more complex with many levels c. more polarized into two classes * d. more based on prestige than property 6. Karl Marx s theories emphasized: a. social class and class conflict * b. supply and demand c. goods and services d. the role of personal prestige 1

7. Marx maintained that all history was the history of a. capitalist accumulation * b. great ideas c. class conflict d. proletariat revolutions 8. Marx believed that socialist revolutions had not yet occurred because industrial workers were a. not yet fully class conscious * b. not yet alienated from their work c. not yet fully exploited d. not yet working for subsistence wages 9. According to Marx, the new class that emerges with industrial capitalism is: a. the peasantry b the patricians c. the plebeians d. the proletariat * 10. According to John Cassidy in The Return of Karl Marx, Marx's correct predictions included a. the fall of the Soviet Union b. growing problems in the operation of capitalism * c. the rise to economic power of the Pacific Rim countries d. communist uprisings in the advanced capitalist countries 11. Ralf Dahrendorf contended that the real issue in class conflict was not property but a. wealth b. prestige c. authority * d. wages 12. For Max Weber, social honor within a community determines one s a. class b. privilege c. party d. status * 13. Max Weber was particularly concerned about how one s position in society affected one s a. health b. life chances * c. voting patterns d. class consciousness 14. Max Weber noted that privileged, powerful, and prestigious groups often seek 2

a. revolutionary change b. democratic reforms c. social closure * d. a greater division of labor 15. For Emile Durkheim, an important element in modern social solidarity is a. good government b. class consciousness c. improved life chances d. the division of labor * 16. Conflict theory is rooted in the work of a. Karl Marx and Max Weber * b. Emile Durkheim and Adam Smith c. Talcott Parsons and Robert Merton d. John Locke and Jean Jacques Rousseau 17. Conflict theorists differ from functionalists in that they believe stratification: a. serves the interests of powerful groups rather than all of society * b. has changed in its form over the course of time c. was most extreme in traditional societies and has declined over time d. is multidimensional in nature 18. Davis and Moore argue that social stratification is functional for society because it provides for a. greater equity b. less alienation c. greater participation d. greater motivation * 19. Gerhard Lenski called his synthesis of conflict and functionalist theories: a. class differentiation theory b. ecological-evolutionary theory * c. world systems theory d. structural privilege theory Part II. True/False Questions 20. Ancient philosophers were all in agreement about one basic idea, that inequality was good and right for society. F 21. Hebrew prophets denounced abuses of wealth, even at risk of angering kings and rulers. T 22. Jesus preached that wealth was a sign of blessing from God. F 3

23. Muhammad told his followers that the freedoms women of his day enjoyed were wrong, and they should be more restricted in their activities. F 24. Confucius (Kong Fuzi) taught that people should obey and respect rightful authority. T 25. Medieval European kings believed that their right to rule came from the consent of the people. F 26. John Locke argued that the authority of rulers comes from the consent of the governed. T 27. Karl Marx contended that human history was the history of class struggle. T 28. Karl Marx believed that conflict was part of human nature, and all societies would always have class conflict and warfare. F 29. Functionalists have argued that inequality is necessary for the smooth functioning of economy and society. T 30. Conflict theorists believe that inequality serves the interests of powerful groups. T Part III. Short-Answer Questions (2 items) 31. List four historical proponents of the conservative thesis that inequality is right and proper. Ans: Select from: Code of Hammurabi, Hindu caste system, Confucius, Aristotle, Apostle Paul, medieval theology, John of Salisbury, Martin Luther, John Calvin, Adam Smith, Gaetano Mosca, social Darwinism, functionalism. 32. List four historical proponents of the radical antithesis that inequality is wrong and destructive. Ans: Select from Hebrew prophets, Lao Tzu, the Buddha, Plato, Jesus, James brother of Jesus, desert fathers, St. Francis of Assisi, Waldensians, Anabaptists, Levellers, Gerrard Winstanley, John Locke, Jean Jacques Rousseau, Karl Marx, Max Weber, conflict theory. Part IV. Essay Questions (3 items) 33. What arguments have been offered in support of the social benefits of inequality, and what counterarguments have been offered to challenge these supposed benefits? How have these arguments formed the basis of conflict and functionalist views of social inequality? 4

Ans: Arguments in support of inequality have ranged from theological arguments that an unequal social order reflects the design of heaven or the will of God to sociological arguments that inequality provides social order, motivation to work hard and achieve, and a way to ensure that the most talented are recognized and rewarded. Arguments against inequality or great inequality have included religious and philosophical arguments that all are created equal, have equal rights and dignity, and that inequality is oppressive and exploits the poor. Sociological arguments against inequality build on these to argue that inequality suppresses talent, alienates poor workers, rewards greed, and deprives the poor of the means and the motivation to use their abilities productively. 34. In what ways are Marx and Weber in agreement on the causes and nature of social inequality? In what ways do their views of stratification and class formation differ? Ans: Both are conflict theorists who see powerful groups trying to maintain and extend their privilege. For Marx, the key factor is ownership of the means of production; wealth is power, and the wealthy use their economic power to dominate the government and social ideology. For Weber, power is multifaceted and also includes struggles to dominate political access and to monopolize high-status positions. 35. Is social inequality desirable for society? Defend your view with arguments from historical and sociological viewpoints discussed in the chapter. Ans: Students arguing yes should be able to draw on the conservative thesis arguments from early philosophers up to structural-functional theorists and neoconservative economists. Students arguing no should begin with radical philosophers and religious thinkers and continue to a range of conflict theorists, perhaps including Marxist and feminist thought. 5